Well they do this for a gamer..Because that is who they build for, you give them $ and they build you a computer for the cash you paid them.

The up side is you will get a complete system with all the CD's for drivers in 1 CD. In other words a master boot/re-install cd configured for your exact build and hardware devices.

They make very good systems if you want to not build your own P.C. Thing is now most people that get to a level where they want a game computer would already have enough skills to purchase and build their own computer.

Assembling a home game P.C is not much harder then cooking your wife a nice dinner. Don't forget the flowers.

No, l makes the best PC's. <A HREF="http://www.go-l.com" target="_new">http://www.go-l.com</A>. I build the second best PC's. If you buy a PC from me, it will include a restore disk with all the original software preconfigured. And a driver CD in case you don't want to do a restore.

<font color=blue>Only a place as big as the internet could be home to a hero as big as Crashman!</font color=blue><font color=red>Only a place as big as the internet could be home to an ego as large as Crashman's!</font color=red>

Getting a good case for cooling is only important if you plan on overclocking, otherwise, a cheap-mid-range case with 3 fans other than the one on you CPU and in the PSU is enough. Post your budget in a post and people will give you a build. A mid-range Pentium based PC today looks like this:P4 2.6GHZ C seriesAbit IS7-E motherboard512MB of PC3200 DDR RAM. Crucial is good value, Corsair, OCZ and Kingson are also good.Graphics card - the most important component for a gamer, the following cards are good, arranged by price: ATI Radeon 9600, ATI Radeon 9600Pro, Radeon 9500Pro, Radeon 9700, Radeon 9800, Radeon 9700Pro, Radeon 9800Pro. The first five cards are better value than the Radeon 9700Pro and 9800Pro. The Radeon 9500Pro, 9700, 9700Pro are discontinued but are still high end, the 9500Pro is a great deal if you can find one (but those are rare).

Directions:Take 137th Avenue to 124th street. Go east on 124th street. Turn right onto 134th court. Turn right into first entrance of Alienware®.

My friend Paul simply contacted them told them what kind of system he waned and they sent it to him UPS air.He had it in 2 weeks fully ready and it came with a complete boot configuration cd to do a system re-install plus he got all the original CD's that came with the hardware installed.

I heard Alienware will use the best (maybe just good) hardware for your system, and will overclock it for you. This is the advantage of buying Alienware if you have money, but no knowledge how to build one. Like they say, the downside is it is a little overprice.

I usually recommend my friends (who don't know how to build a computer) to buy Dell. Their prices are very competitive and they provide excellent customer service. The downside is that your hardware may be limited on upgrading, and they locked the Bios preventing you from overclocking.

Anyone out there knows how to overclock a Dell? I will really appreciate it if someone can share the knowledge.

Take the money that you would spend on Alienware and buy the parts individually online. Then take those parts to a local mom and pop computer shop and have them build your computer for you. They'll charge you $30-$60 an hour.

When you're done you'll have the same computer for a small fraction of the price.

_________________________________________<font color=red>12 bit... The way games are meant to be played!</font color=red>

Its not very difficult to build a pc, I was always knew about alot of stuff, and never really physically built one. I read for weeks and diagrams and video's on AMD's site for installing HSF... most of the stuff i knew like HD setup and how cards go in and that stuff, but i physically never built anything before.... System Below on signature is the first computer i ever built, i did alot of research on parts and built in a few hours, had a few problems ..(bad board) but other then that it worked on first shot. I'd reccomend you try to order and build yourself, not Only was i happy it worked, but i was proud that the machine i am running right now to type this was built by me~! yay!...lol

nah but seriously it's not that hard... i will never buy another computer for myself ever... only thing i will buy is a Laptop... that's about it

That's how i got into building pc's. I took my case apart*gateway* and i was like.. why isn't my computer working.Then it went to video card upgrades and memory upgrades.I saw all the cables labled and the lables on the mobo and new i could do it.Bought an Alienware becuase i was afraid to build a pc, then i spent like 2800 on it and iwas like [-peep-] i could have saved a lot of money.

Now i build one for anyone i know who wants one. Heh, Free.Just becuase i like doing it.I know my alienware can't be overclocked but they know what's best for gaming.They used the best mobo for rdram at the time, which at the time i thought was going to be the winner of the DDR vs Rdram duels. Set up the few bios options that you can.And I think they tweaked it a bit.. but i can't find out what they did.

Any idea's on what they might have done would be great, specially so i can learn. I can build a computer but i'm not a master at it yet.